If your server is auditing logon events then you should be able to go to the event viewer - security log and see when the user last logged on. However, depending on the number of users this could take some weeding through logs.

You might be able to look at your dhcp logs and see when the user obtained their IP address lease (only if the server in question is the dhcp server).

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If you migrate a Terminal Server licenses server inside the 2008 server family, you can takte advantage of the build-in migration tool. If you like to migrate an older 2003 Server (and the installed client CALs) to a 2008 R2 server for example, you …

I was supporting a handful of Windows 2008 (non-R2) 2 node clusters with shared quorum disks. Some had SQL 2008 installed and some were just a vendor application that we supported. For the purposes of this article it doesn’t really matter which so w…

This tutorial will show how to push an installation of Backup Exec to an additional server in both 2012 and 2014 versions of the software.
Click on the Backup Exec button in the upper left corner. From here, select Installation and Licensing, then I…

This tutorial will walk an individual through the steps necessary to join and promote the first Windows Server 2012 domain controller into an Active Directory environment running on Windows Server 2008.
Determine the location of the FSMO roles by lo…